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Oct 26, 2012
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working for new mexico teachers. it was a top-down, washington prescribed approach that congresswoman wilson embraced in congress, but it's not working. it's not working for my kids. they are in public school right now here in central new mexico. we need a different approach. we're not going to goat afrom testing. we shouldn't test that compares this year's 5 #th graders with last years. test at the beginning of the year where it tells the teacher where each individual child is to tailor their instruction, and then do testing at the end of the year to know what kind of incremental and growth based progress they made over the course of the year. >> moderator: heather, i see you now making a face. what was that about? wilson: it was a smile. [laughter] the no child left behind act was the secretary education agent allowing federal funds to go to schools in new mexico for kids who are low income and for kids with special needs. i strongly support that federal funding to aid education, but i think that the decisions abou
working for new mexico teachers. it was a top-down, washington prescribed approach that congresswoman wilson embraced in congress, but it's not working. it's not working for my kids. they are in public school right now here in central new mexico. we need a different approach. we're not going to goat afrom testing. we shouldn't test that compares this year's 5 #th graders with last years. test at the beginning of the year where it tells the teacher where each individual child is to tailor their...
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Oct 21, 2012
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angela chose northern new mexico, she's from central new mexico, albuquerque. beith of our -- both of our families have issues with addiction. i think that was another point of end counter between us. end -- encounter between us. but she chose northern new mexico, i think, not to be right next door to her family, you know? is but close enough so that we could visit often. and also because northern new mexico, there's this place called the espanol lavallee which runs along highway 5 which ultimately comes out of santa fe and, taos. and that place in northern new mexico has the highest rate of
angela chose northern new mexico, she's from central new mexico, albuquerque. beith of our -- both of our families have issues with addiction. i think that was another point of end counter between us. end -- encounter between us. but she chose northern new mexico, i think, not to be right next door to her family, you know? is but close enough so that we could visit often. and also because northern new mexico, there's this place called the espanol lavallee which runs along highway 5 which...
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Oct 14, 2012
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>> i was born in mexico in southern mexico and the little city that no one has heard of. when i mention acapulco everyone knows i'll could poke so it was a few hours away from acapulco. >> windage of parents come to the united states? >> my father came here in 1977 when i was three years old and he sent for my mother a few years later so my mother came in 1980 when i was four and a half years old. >> when did you come to the united states? >> i came to united states in 1985. >> how old were you? >> in may of 1985, i was nine and a half going on 10. >> what you tell us about coming to the united states? what was your track? >> well i have been separated from my father for eight years so when he returned to mexico and 85, my sisters and i convinced him to bring us back here because he was not going to come back to mexico and we didn't want to spend anymore time separated from him. so we begged him to bring us here and my father didn't really want to bring me because i was nine and a half and he thought i wouldn't be able to make it across the border. we had to run across il
>> i was born in mexico in southern mexico and the little city that no one has heard of. when i mention acapulco everyone knows i'll could poke so it was a few hours away from acapulco. >> windage of parents come to the united states? >> my father came here in 1977 when i was three years old and he sent for my mother a few years later so my mother came in 1980 when i was four and a half years old. >> when did you come to the united states? >> i came to united...
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Oct 21, 2012
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i didn't want to go back to mexico and i wanted to make him proud. and then another thing i felt so too was because i begged him to bring me, i felt that i owed him that. i never wanted my father to say, i shouldn't have brought you. andy was that, they really like always motivated me to do well in school, to do all these great things that he wanted me to do because i didn't want to hear that i've heard from my dad. and he never said that to me. he didn't. but yeah, as i was writing the book, i really wanted to make sure that he didn't come across as the villain in this story. you know, i really wanted to give him his humanity because he has some really great things, my dad. he was also dealing with a lot of difficulties that unfortunately affected our relationship. >> host: you tell a story and hear how you want to go church was the day anyhow that the budweiser but this is my god. what is your father passed? >> guest: he passed away last year. he died from liver cancer. and he got diagnosed with cirrhosis back in 93 and he never told us that he kep
i didn't want to go back to mexico and i wanted to make him proud. and then another thing i felt so too was because i begged him to bring me, i felt that i owed him that. i never wanted my father to say, i shouldn't have brought you. andy was that, they really like always motivated me to do well in school, to do all these great things that he wanted me to do because i didn't want to hear that i've heard from my dad. and he never said that to me. he didn't. but yeah, as i was writing the book, i...
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Oct 6, 2012
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we fought a war with mexico. we have incursions' in to mexico under general pershing. everything we do in mexico has to go through a tight diplomatic filter. that being said, there is more we can do in terms of helping the mexican authorities than we have been doing. the ultimate power of the united states is the time that our top decisionmakers can devote to a problem in a given day. that is why we can't have 33 wars or two wars going on at the same time. if we have a no-fly zone in ceo or the persian gulf erupts or the south china sea here rafts we would have trouble handling that. if we can have more top decisionmakers spend time on the mexico probably would come up with more bowls, innovative ways to help the mexicans who by the way, there's another side to the mexican story. mexico was one of the world's leading economies. the economy has been growing last few years impressively. it is not a country you can easily categorize or make into a cliche. it is incredibly dynamic but incredibly dysfunctional and lawless at the same time. the gentleman behind the last ques
we fought a war with mexico. we have incursions' in to mexico under general pershing. everything we do in mexico has to go through a tight diplomatic filter. that being said, there is more we can do in terms of helping the mexican authorities than we have been doing. the ultimate power of the united states is the time that our top decisionmakers can devote to a problem in a given day. that is why we can't have 33 wars or two wars going on at the same time. if we have a no-fly zone in ceo or the...
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Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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it's not working for new mexico students and it's not working for new mexico teachers. it was a top down washington prescribed approach that congresswoman wilson embraced when she was in congress. but it's not working. it's not working for my kids. they're in public school right now here in central new mexico. we need a different approach. we're not going get away from testing. we shouldn't do testing that compares this year's fifth graders with last year. we should do testing at the begin of the year that tells the teacher where each individual child is so they can tail their instruction and do test at end of the year to know what kind of growth-based progress they have made over the course of the year. >> moderator: heather, i see you making a face. what is that about? wilson: it was a smile. the no child left -- act that allows trillion funds to go to schools in new mexico for kid who are low-income and for kids who have special needs. and i strongly support that federal funding to aid education. but i think the decisions about how that money should be made should be
it's not working for new mexico students and it's not working for new mexico teachers. it was a top down washington prescribed approach that congresswoman wilson embraced when she was in congress. but it's not working. it's not working for my kids. they're in public school right now here in central new mexico. we need a different approach. we're not going get away from testing. we shouldn't do testing that compares this year's fifth graders with last year. we should do testing at the begin of...
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Oct 15, 2012
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>> guest: in mexico, southern mexico in a little city that no one heard of, but when i mention alcapaco, everybody knows that. it was three hours from there. >> host: when did your parents come to the united states? how old were you? >> guest: my father came here in 1997 when i was two years old, and he send for my mother a few years later in 1980 when i was four and a half years old. >> host: when did you come to the united states? >> guest: i came to the united states in 198 # 5. >> host: how old were you? >> guest: in may of 1985, nine and a half going on ten. >> host: what can you tell us about coming to the united states? what was your trek? >> guest: well, i had been separated from my father for eight years so when he returned to mexico in 1985, we convinced him to bring us back here. he was not coming back to mexico, and we didn't want anymore time separated from him. my father didn't want to bring me because i was nine and a half, and he thought i couldn't make it across the border because we had to run across illegally. i begged him to bring me here, and we took a bus from mexi
>> guest: in mexico, southern mexico in a little city that no one heard of, but when i mention alcapaco, everybody knows that. it was three hours from there. >> host: when did your parents come to the united states? how old were you? >> guest: my father came here in 1997 when i was two years old, and he send for my mother a few years later in 1980 when i was four and a half years old. >> host: when did you come to the united states? >> guest: i came to the united...
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Oct 28, 2012
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i am going to take you to northern new mexico briefly here. angela chosen northern new mexico. she is from central mexico, albuquerque. both of our families have issues with addiction. that was another point of encounter between us and she chose northern new mexico not to be next door to her family but close enough to visit and also because northern new mexico runs along highway 68 which ultimately comes out of santa fe and goes to town. you go to the edge spaniel of valley which is the low road and in northern new mexico there is the highest rate of heroin addiction and death from overdose of heroin of anywhere in the country, it has for a long time and it is not getting better, it is getting worse. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. here's a look at some books being published this week. alex kerr shock chronicles the journey of felix sparks, commander of the 157th dubee regiment in the liberator, one world war ii's soldier's boys from sicily to the gates of dow. journalist and media critic eric deegan argues the media capitalizes on viewers fears a
i am going to take you to northern new mexico briefly here. angela chosen northern new mexico. she is from central mexico, albuquerque. both of our families have issues with addiction. that was another point of encounter between us and she chose northern new mexico not to be next door to her family but close enough to visit and also because northern new mexico runs along highway 68 which ultimately comes out of santa fe and goes to town. you go to the edge spaniel of valley which is the low...
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Oct 22, 2012
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. >> are they principles you had and used when you were governor of new mexico? >> always, always, and i actually delivered one of my state of the state addresses using the seven principles. look, here's how we need to conduct ourselves, and, anyway, just very -- very common sense. >> if you would, your philosophy and libertarian's philosophy on the role of government, the right size of government. >> so libertarian philosophy, with a broad brush stroke, the notion that most of us in the country are socially accepting and that we're fiscally responsible. that's a broad brush stroke, a broad brush stroke is wearing a pin lapel pin saying "i'm pro-choice regarding everything." well, pro-choice regarding everything means that actually if your choices involve putting other people in harm's way or your choices defraud or harm another human being, then that's when the government -- that's where the government has a role, to protect us against individuals, groups, corporations that would do us harm. >> as governor, did you -- did you shrink the size of the state governm
. >> are they principles you had and used when you were governor of new mexico? >> always, always, and i actually delivered one of my state of the state addresses using the seven principles. look, here's how we need to conduct ourselves, and, anyway, just very -- very common sense. >> if you would, your philosophy and libertarian's philosophy on the role of government, the right size of government. >> so libertarian philosophy, with a broad brush stroke, the notion that...
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Oct 22, 2012
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i will take you to northern mexico briefly. and gillette chose number the mexico. both families have issues with addiction. that was a point* of encounter between us. she chose northern mexico not to be right next door but close enough to visit often and the his big yellow valley ultimately comes out of santa fe few have ever driven that way it is called the low road. that place as the highest rate of heroin addiction and death from overdose and 80 where in the country. and has for along time. the problem is getting worse. not better.
i will take you to northern mexico briefly. and gillette chose number the mexico. both families have issues with addiction. that was a point* of encounter between us. she chose northern mexico not to be right next door but close enough to visit often and the his big yellow valley ultimately comes out of santa fe few have ever driven that way it is called the low road. that place as the highest rate of heroin addiction and death from overdose and 80 where in the country. and has for along time....
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Oct 13, 2012
10/12
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i am going to take you to northern new mexico. angela chose northern new mexico. she is from central mexico, albuquerque. both of our families have issues with addiction. that was another point of encounter between us. she chose not to be right next door to her family but close enough so we could visit and also because northern new mexico there's a valley which is along highway 68 which ultimately comes out of santa fe. you will be in the valley called the low road. that place in new mexico has the highest rate of heroin addiction and death from overdose of heroin anywhere in the country. and has for long time. the problem is not getting better. it is getting worse. >> you can watch this and other programs online at booktv.org. you are watching booktv on c-span2. here is our prime time lineup for tonight. beginning at 7:00 eastern,th
i am going to take you to northern new mexico. angela chose northern new mexico. she is from central mexico, albuquerque. both of our families have issues with addiction. that was another point of encounter between us. she chose not to be right next door to her family but close enough so we could visit and also because northern new mexico there's a valley which is along highway 68 which ultimately comes out of santa fe. you will be in the valley called the low road. that place in new mexico has...
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Oct 21, 2012
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proved that true, followed to mexico by the cia. one accused them of setting up a happiness hotel in mexico, and he said we should have hired the cia as the press agent. [laughter] so, yeah, there was all kinds of credible research about the cia. that's it. i don't really get into it, and the other question about the good of it -- the concord prison project, someone in the audience did a fantastic follow-up study -- good friday and -- and you -- the problem with that research, i think, if i understand it right, was that, yeah, they tripped with these prisoners, and they spent a lot of time with them, counseling them after they got out of prison, and, sure, they reduced recidivism rates. if you took people and didn't give them drugs and spent that much time helping them and counseling them, you reduce the recidivism rate. it's hard to tell what effect was from the drug and the other attention showered on them. you don't know what the right kind of control group -- >> misrepresentation of the results of the study? >> yeah. >> so a 35
proved that true, followed to mexico by the cia. one accused them of setting up a happiness hotel in mexico, and he said we should have hired the cia as the press agent. [laughter] so, yeah, there was all kinds of credible research about the cia. that's it. i don't really get into it, and the other question about the good of it -- the concord prison project, someone in the audience did a fantastic follow-up study -- good friday and -- and you -- the problem with that research, i think, if i...
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Oct 2, 2012
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when i was governor of new mexico. we took it from a fee-for-service model to a managed care model. we saved hundreds of millions of dollars, we set up better health care networks for the poor in new mexico. i believe if the federal government would have block granted the state of new mexico 43% less money, done away with all the strings and the mandates that i could have effectively overseen the delivery of health care to the poor. i think you apply that same template to medicare, health care for those over 65, get the federal government out of the health care business completely, give it up to the states -- in this case block grants that balance revenu with expenditures -- and that's how we're going to get out of this. we're going to -- giving it up to the states, 50 laboratories of innovation and best practice, i think that's exactly what we will have. we'll have some fabulous success, we'll also have some horrible failure. failure will get avoided, success will get emulated. but that's how we're going to find our w
when i was governor of new mexico. we took it from a fee-for-service model to a managed care model. we saved hundreds of millions of dollars, we set up better health care networks for the poor in new mexico. i believe if the federal government would have block granted the state of new mexico 43% less money, done away with all the strings and the mandates that i could have effectively overseen the delivery of health care to the poor. i think you apply that same template to medicare, health care...
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Oct 15, 2012
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texas was raising troops to attack federal fourses in new mexico. journalist predicted that blood would soon be spilled in the halls of congress, and guns were drawn. in fact. and yet in the end, a solution, a compromise was found. the questions i began with were, how? how did congress make a paralyzed system actually work? and what would a close examination of the debates reveal about the costs of unyielding partisanship, and about the nature of compromise, and about the human qualities that it took to bridge a divide that many americans feared could never be crossed. and i should say, i also fell in love with the orator of the 1850s. the politicians of the time spoke per swayssively and provocatively and passionately in language that was so splendid it reached the level of literature. incidentally, all the speeches were available, down loadable for free, the library of congress. they make great reading, most of them. and thanks to the library of congress, they're making them available. the spin doctors argued and grammatically challenged messages
texas was raising troops to attack federal fourses in new mexico. journalist predicted that blood would soon be spilled in the halls of congress, and guns were drawn. in fact. and yet in the end, a solution, a compromise was found. the questions i began with were, how? how did congress make a paralyzed system actually work? and what would a close examination of the debates reveal about the costs of unyielding partisanship, and about the nature of compromise, and about the human qualities that...
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Oct 24, 2012
10/12
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mexico is a great and mighty nation and it is tragic what is happening in mexico. it's tragic. i was visiting with a mexican businessman several weeks ago who described to me how he'd received from the drug lords a letter that details where everyone of his grandkids have been for the past week minute by minute. it is tragic what is happening in mexico and i think the united states should work cooperatively with mexico to help mexican government solve this problem, stop the violence and stop the drug lords who are terrorizing so many innocent citizens. >> the national guard as well? cruz: . >> for the mexican military? cruz: the danger of funding is unfortunately one of the problems mexico is dealing with this corruption. it is still in peril right now in the drug war and i don't think we should be sending money when there is a risk of corruption but i think we should work cooperatively to help solve the problem. >> we have had this agreement in place and it has worked well. i think we have great whoppers with their past president of mexico and a pink hour new president will sup
mexico is a great and mighty nation and it is tragic what is happening in mexico. it's tragic. i was visiting with a mexican businessman several weeks ago who described to me how he'd received from the drug lords a letter that details where everyone of his grandkids have been for the past week minute by minute. it is tragic what is happening in mexico and i think the united states should work cooperatively with mexico to help mexican government solve this problem, stop the violence and stop the...
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Oct 23, 2012
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i think nevada and new mexico, you can't count those out. though safing, new mexico is with president obama and nevada is leaning towards obama and the ground game and nevada, his ground game in nevada's second to none. colorado seems to be slipping away but i still would not completely give up on that. so i still would contend that if president obama wins the presidency it will be because he will have won ohio but then it will be because he has been able to put into his column states like new mexico and nevada, no question about that and in ohio the latino vote is 3% of the population. the voters are probably 2%, maybe 1.5 but you're absolutely right when you have 166,000 eligible latino voters in ohio and a state that is so crucial in a campaign and a race that is so close, every single latino vote is going to count. >> ana? >> i think the firewall is on fire. and i think he has got, i think president obama -- [inaudible] >> we are being deported from the first club. i think the firewall is on fire and he is a limited amount of time and a
i think nevada and new mexico, you can't count those out. though safing, new mexico is with president obama and nevada is leaning towards obama and the ground game and nevada, his ground game in nevada's second to none. colorado seems to be slipping away but i still would not completely give up on that. so i still would contend that if president obama wins the presidency it will be because he will have won ohio but then it will be because he has been able to put into his column states like new...
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Oct 26, 2012
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it will cost another 11,000 jobs here in new mexico. he wants to raise taxes in the upper income brackets, half of which are small businesses, which will cost us another 4300 jobs. right here in new mexico. he voted for us across the board. it will cost us 4000 new jobs. we need some and will fight for the strong businesses who will struggle with the tough decision to have to make because of the lousy policies put in place and for spending. we need to get back to strong economic growth and job creation. that is what i am going to do in the united states senate. [cheers] [applause] >> moderator: thank you, audience, for holding your closet till the end. and thank you for joining us for tonight's u.s. senate debate in 12 days. make your voices heard. please vote. join us on election night for complete coverage. in the meantime comest, see you tonight on the news at 10:00 o'clock. good night. [cheers] [applause] >> the new york 24th district today debated. this debate is part of the central news in new york. >> tonight, the debate of the c
it will cost another 11,000 jobs here in new mexico. he wants to raise taxes in the upper income brackets, half of which are small businesses, which will cost us another 4300 jobs. right here in new mexico. he voted for us across the board. it will cost us 4000 new jobs. we need some and will fight for the strong businesses who will struggle with the tough decision to have to make because of the lousy policies put in place and for spending. we need to get back to strong economic growth and job...
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Oct 25, 2012
10/12
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i actually think there is a genocide going on in mexico. i think when you see a number of deaths by drug violence going on just across their border, when you see what they say tests are in mexico, when you see the hundreds and thousands, including journalists and not civilians in mexico, jamaica qualified as a genocide. i also think that the nuclear, we are not developing a nuclear armed anywhere in latin america i hope. ahmadinejad has been of great alliances and is spending a lot of time in places like managua, havana. if someone else is 90 miles away is that tremendous concern. so i think there's plenty of reason to be concerned about what's happening in latin america. and disappointed that it didn't. anyway though, i've gotten a little tired of hearing every four years, campaigns tell me about how much attention they're going to pay for latin america and neighbors to the south and backyard are closest neighbors. and one completely elects the region. so this now the neglect the debate so the expectations -- the reality is not going to no
i actually think there is a genocide going on in mexico. i think when you see a number of deaths by drug violence going on just across their border, when you see what they say tests are in mexico, when you see the hundreds and thousands, including journalists and not civilians in mexico, jamaica qualified as a genocide. i also think that the nuclear, we are not developing a nuclear armed anywhere in latin america i hope. ahmadinejad has been of great alliances and is spending a lot of time in...
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Oct 28, 2012
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mexico's north stretch from the sabine river on the gulf of mexico to the 42nd parallel on the pacific ocean what is now texas, arizona, new mexico, utah, nevada, california, colorado, oklahoma, and kansas. the pacific northwest was open country. back east, the appalachian mountain range guarding the interior from south carolina who what was recently maine threatened to confine the great american experiment to the atlantic sea board. the allegiance of the several transstates was unproven. there, settlers looked west down valleys to the mighty mississippi, not over their shoulders that the mountains that separated them from the political creators. former vice president conspiracy of 1805 and 1806 to make a nation for himself and others opened by the purchase had come apart, but illustrated limited control exerted by the east over the west of the national government over its unsettled territory. a continental nation so uncertain that president thomas jefferson deemed it optional, quote, "whether we remain in one confederacy or form into atlantic and pacific confederacies, i believe not i
mexico's north stretch from the sabine river on the gulf of mexico to the 42nd parallel on the pacific ocean what is now texas, arizona, new mexico, utah, nevada, california, colorado, oklahoma, and kansas. the pacific northwest was open country. back east, the appalachian mountain range guarding the interior from south carolina who what was recently maine threatened to confine the great american experiment to the atlantic sea board. the allegiance of the several transstates was unproven....
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Oct 13, 2012
10/12
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>> no, i do not want to go back to mexico. and i wanted to make him proud. another thing i felt was because i begged him to bring me over here, i felt that i owed him out. i felt that i never wanted my father to say, i shouldn't have brought you. >> winner of the american book award and international latino book award. part of booktv this weekend on c-span2. as we enter these last few months, one of the great untold stories is not just obama versus romney. it is obama versus karl rove. he has put together over $1 billion that will be spent in these last two months. here in new york are not going to see much of it. it will be spent in the battleground state. he has become king of the super pacs. $1.8 billion. to put that into perspective, in 2008, mccain had 375 million to spend. this is a factor of five. you're going to start seeing it come out now. the other thing that i wanted to discuss his who is he, what does he do? he is a political operative. well, how does he operate? what does he do? and i talked to a couple of sources about that. one, who is one of
>> no, i do not want to go back to mexico. and i wanted to make him proud. another thing i felt was because i begged him to bring me over here, i felt that i owed him out. i felt that i never wanted my father to say, i shouldn't have brought you. >> winner of the american book award and international latino book award. part of booktv this weekend on c-span2. as we enter these last few months, one of the great untold stories is not just obama versus romney. it is obama versus karl...
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Oct 2, 2012
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>> as governor of new mexico and was bolar outspoken end on school choice. we need to bring competition to public education. what is the best things the federal government could do? to abolish the federal department of education established 1979 vendor to make carter is there anything since 1979 that suggest the department of education is value added? no. it gives each state $0.11 at of their dollar that they spend. but they tell you hear it is the list you have to accomplish but to do so it costs $0.16. nobody recognizes it cost money to take federal money. get the federal department of education out. get the federal government out. give education to the states. 50 states of laboratories of intervention -- invention we will have some failure that is avoided but 50 different laboratories, i would suggest we would come up with incredibly innovative ways to deliver education in this country. >> host: our guest is joining us from santa fe former governor of new mexico served as a republican in 1995 through 2003. currently the libertarian presidential nominee no
>> as governor of new mexico and was bolar outspoken end on school choice. we need to bring competition to public education. what is the best things the federal government could do? to abolish the federal department of education established 1979 vendor to make carter is there anything since 1979 that suggest the department of education is value added? no. it gives each state $0.11 at of their dollar that they spend. but they tell you hear it is the list you have to accomplish but to do so...
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Oct 27, 2012
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of new mexico. and i may have made a name for myself. i did make a name for myself. arguably, be doing more legislation than the other 49 governors in the country combined. i vetoed 750 bills. i took line-item veto to a new art form. i said no to billions of dollars worth of government spending. and i said no legislation that i think would of added time and money for us to have to comply with those laws. it was a way to make us any safer, it wasn't going to improve our lives in any way. and it was going to add money we were going to have to spend on it in time to be able to comply with it. >> you also funded your own campaigns, essentially. >> well, my first campaign, i funded it out of a 550,000-dollar primary. 510 of that was mine. thirty of the remainder actually came with a few days ago in the primary because it appeared as though i might actually win it i would like to point out that new mexico is a state that is one democrat. getting elected, vowing to get any picture, spending my time proving
of new mexico. and i may have made a name for myself. i did make a name for myself. arguably, be doing more legislation than the other 49 governors in the country combined. i vetoed 750 bills. i took line-item veto to a new art form. i said no to billions of dollars worth of government spending. and i said no legislation that i think would of added time and money for us to have to comply with those laws. it was a way to make us any safer, it wasn't going to improve our lives in any way. and it...
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Oct 5, 2012
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the recent election in mexico, everybody voted. nobody asked you whether you were allowed to vote, registered to vote. the only way to vote was to have the registration card from the national voter registration office. that was given to everybody across the country. that isn't your driver's license. you're driver's license comes from each state like it does in the u.s., but the voter registration card comes from the federal mexican government, and it is a different series of proof you need to prove that you are a mexican citizen and that's it. they don't care how we were going to vote or where you are going to vote from. you get a card, it has your photograph and also has your fingerprints so there are no faking at the same time. it is a rather high-tech card, but it's a given out by the federal electoral commission so this is something we should think that for the future. >> again what a lot of people don't understand is that there is no federal standard. although you might have a presidential election in the congressional races t
the recent election in mexico, everybody voted. nobody asked you whether you were allowed to vote, registered to vote. the only way to vote was to have the registration card from the national voter registration office. that was given to everybody across the country. that isn't your driver's license. you're driver's license comes from each state like it does in the u.s., but the voter registration card comes from the federal mexican government, and it is a different series of proof you need to...
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Oct 10, 2012
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and mexico 12, another latino country 6%. that is all for% in the emerging market. we have roughly speaking half of our earnings. the rest diversified in countries such as the u.s., u.k. or germany. that means diversification is their kiosk pectin understanding under the resilience against the crisis. the fact of having a decentralized city area, means that if any crisis were to happen in one of the markets in which we are, we are able to have a firewall around this element of christ is, affecting by the investment in those countries but that the spillover impact. when we present to the bank of spain, we underline the bank of spain, as one of the great bear. they standalone independent said series. with the fact of having the banking operation with the largest branch of the world give us access to stable liquidity dependent on financial market. we find ourselves basically the banking obligation, another interesting feature. to the extent, it is likely about 100% of 170%, which is practically funding our assets and with a very strong position, according to regulation
and mexico 12, another latino country 6%. that is all for% in the emerging market. we have roughly speaking half of our earnings. the rest diversified in countries such as the u.s., u.k. or germany. that means diversification is their kiosk pectin understanding under the resilience against the crisis. the fact of having a decentralized city area, means that if any crisis were to happen in one of the markets in which we are, we are able to have a firewall around this element of christ is,...
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Oct 25, 2012
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i think there is a genocide going on in mexico. when they see a member of the drug violence going on across the border when you see with the states are doing in mexico, went you see the hundreds of thousands of journalists and activists under being killed, to me that qualifies as a genocide. i also think that the nuclear -- we are not developing a nuclear arms i hope. ahmadinejad has alliances and he's spending a lot of time in places like havana and that is some of that lives 90 miles away from cuba is of tremendous concern. so, i think there is plenty of reason to be concerned about what is happening in latin america. i am disappointed that it didn't come up in a way though. they didn't pander i've gotten a little tired of hearing every four years campaigns tell me how much attention they are printed page to latin america and our neighbors to the south and the closest neighbors and when they are elected they neglect the region so now the expectations, the reality is not going to match the expectations created during the campaign.
i think there is a genocide going on in mexico. when they see a member of the drug violence going on across the border when you see with the states are doing in mexico, went you see the hundreds of thousands of journalists and activists under being killed, to me that qualifies as a genocide. i also think that the nuclear -- we are not developing a nuclear arms i hope. ahmadinejad has alliances and he's spending a lot of time in places like havana and that is some of that lives 90 miles away...
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Oct 20, 2012
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former rebel troops were streaming into mexico seeking refuge. state department opposed any actions that might lead to war with mexico. so share dan -- sheridan conducted a clandestine cold war, arguably the first in u.s. history. he conducted con pick accuse troop ma nevers near the rio grande river and provided mexican insurgents with weapons from the federal arsenal. probably do to sheridan's evidents, and also due to events in europe, france's emperor, napoleon iii, withdrew his support of maximilian. maximilian's regime collapsed and the mexican insurgents that sheridan had supported, took control of their country. sheridan was a military governor of texas and louisiana during the early phases of reconstruction. the army commanders in the south were caught between congress' harsh reconstruction policies and president andrew johnson's opposition to them. most of them kept a low profile. sheridan did not. urged on by grant, he alone removed elected officials who defied congress' policies. fired scores of them. from city alderman to the governo
former rebel troops were streaming into mexico seeking refuge. state department opposed any actions that might lead to war with mexico. so share dan -- sheridan conducted a clandestine cold war, arguably the first in u.s. history. he conducted con pick accuse troop ma nevers near the rio grande river and provided mexican insurgents with weapons from the federal arsenal. probably do to sheridan's evidents, and also due to events in europe, france's emperor, napoleon iii, withdrew his support of...
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Oct 21, 2012
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disproportionate amount of influence but the irony again is that most of the -- de conquer during the mexico can pan with an army that's usually about 104,011,000. this is the third of the size of the army much smaller dvr me you see at places like gettysburg and scott is the only person that has much experience and by the time of the civil war he's too old to take the field. all of the future civil war generals are officers who have experience with what we would call major combat operations with its still a much smaller scale and after that all they did was right on the frontier or the fortifications, so their expertise is actually in many ways also terribly deficient. but it's better than what everyone else has, which is nothing. so, there is a very small professional army, but the army the union of the confederacy produced cannot be i will describe it as a profession i would say and so probably leading until 1862 >> if you teach this to carry the naval academy, what do you want students to leave with? spaight you never want to be that professor who is sox=@= obviously trying to sell books
disproportionate amount of influence but the irony again is that most of the -- de conquer during the mexico can pan with an army that's usually about 104,011,000. this is the third of the size of the army much smaller dvr me you see at places like gettysburg and scott is the only person that has much experience and by the time of the civil war he's too old to take the field. all of the future civil war generals are officers who have experience with what we would call major combat operations...
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Oct 28, 2012
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i live in a place in new mexico where the cowboy hats and ladies in the post office saying barack obama was born in libya. when they ask what my book is about and i tell them it is and economic social analysis of why the end of the drug war was good for america, without fail the response is the tragedy in mexico and when is the drug war going to end? is not dangerous, when we going to stop -- left-wing or right-wing and televangelist. the truth is black and white. dangerous for me as a journalist with a few decades of experience, too much of a cheerleader about this particular issue. people are going to
i live in a place in new mexico where the cowboy hats and ladies in the post office saying barack obama was born in libya. when they ask what my book is about and i tell them it is and economic social analysis of why the end of the drug war was good for america, without fail the response is the tragedy in mexico and when is the drug war going to end? is not dangerous, when we going to stop -- left-wing or right-wing and televangelist. the truth is black and white. dangerous for me as a...
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Oct 18, 2012
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i am also working on a program in mexico in the schools in mexico that will now be up to about 6,000 schools to operate in the networking. so, here is an implication for the argument that we make in the peace coming and i want to say that i am more radical on this set of issues than nicoe authors -- co-authors. inevitably, learning is alive and well in society. the means for access to learning will be more flexible and more responsive to individual demand however disorganized. how it is organized is going to be up for grabs. it will not accommodate well to the hierarchy model and the longer that we stay with the domestic hierarchy model, the worse the association between learning and schooling will be. .. in which public school organization are trying to accommodate to the digital age are totally dysfunctional, and these institutions will die as a a consequence of that. finally, just an argument about neuroscience, i know i'm actually taking a neuro biology course at berkeley online, and i look back on my classroom observations and i think this is an institution that once the finding
i am also working on a program in mexico in the schools in mexico that will now be up to about 6,000 schools to operate in the networking. so, here is an implication for the argument that we make in the peace coming and i want to say that i am more radical on this set of issues than nicoe authors -- co-authors. inevitably, learning is alive and well in society. the means for access to learning will be more flexible and more responsive to individual demand however disorganized. how it is...
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Oct 29, 2012
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and, finally, the late 1840s, the battle over the future slavery in the territory one from mexico, known as the mexican session, following the mexican war, was settled by the compromise of 1850. thus coming to look at these four examples, another such settlement to take place in 1860-61. the chief issue between the republicans and the south involves slavery. but not slavery in the 15 states where it exists. almost all americans in 1860, republicans included, believed that the constitution protected slavery in the states where it existed. rather, the critical question was slavery international territories, and the territories owned by the nation but have not yet become states. these territories comprised with you today today as the great plains, the rocky mountains and west of the rocky mountains to california. didn't include california because california as you know was already a state. question was so critical because it had to do with the future of slavery, and the future of southern power in the nation. now, southerners demanded what they saw as their constitutional rights as american
and, finally, the late 1840s, the battle over the future slavery in the territory one from mexico, known as the mexican session, following the mexican war, was settled by the compromise of 1850. thus coming to look at these four examples, another such settlement to take place in 1860-61. the chief issue between the republicans and the south involves slavery. but not slavery in the 15 states where it exists. almost all americans in 1860, republicans included, believed that the constitution...
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Oct 14, 2012
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equality the third most unequal country in terms of incomes, the only countries that are worse for mexico and chile. so what about germany? what happened is since 1985 the average salary of german workers has risen five times faster than in america. so if you can't afford to pay more and can't compete globally, how do all of the big companies do it? well, if the companies can make it the country as a whole can't make it may be as the economy as a whole. let me just tell you that in the last decade germany rated 2 trillion-dollar trade surplus against the competition from china, india, the asian tigers and the united states ran a 6 trillion-dollar trade deficit. so we are facing the same global competition that we were and they did $8 trillion better than we could and they were paying their workers more. how could that be? it doesn't make sense, does it? the next thing is we are told we can't compete on the old manufacturing basis. we've got to become a service economy. you've got to go out and learn knowledge shots. that's where the future is. i've got a couple of chapters on what happene
equality the third most unequal country in terms of incomes, the only countries that are worse for mexico and chile. so what about germany? what happened is since 1985 the average salary of german workers has risen five times faster than in america. so if you can't afford to pay more and can't compete globally, how do all of the big companies do it? well, if the companies can make it the country as a whole can't make it may be as the economy as a whole. let me just tell you that in the last...
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Oct 21, 2012
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the response is when are the tragedy's in mexico. it's not that dangerous compared to the polls and the math. when are we going to stop arresting people for pot. left wing, right wing, they will go on this for crying out loud. the truth is black-and-white. it's dangerous for me as a journalist with two decades experience to sound too much of a cheerleader about any particular issue. you people are going to think i am cheech or maybe woody harrelson. the reality is from a journalistic perspective it is black and white civilians we can put back into our economy while hurting the cartels. i know it is up to 70% of the cartel's. but the fact is quite a lot of organized crime's are not from the heroine's of the mess, we can have american farmers growing dissent taxing it and on the industrial side but north dakota back. not to cut the's agricultural commission is begging to put this plant back to work for america's factories, clothing and energy. i went to a sustainability test of a few years ago for my previous book where i was giving a
the response is when are the tragedy's in mexico. it's not that dangerous compared to the polls and the math. when are we going to stop arresting people for pot. left wing, right wing, they will go on this for crying out loud. the truth is black-and-white. it's dangerous for me as a journalist with two decades experience to sound too much of a cheerleader about any particular issue. you people are going to think i am cheech or maybe woody harrelson. the reality is from a journalistic...
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Oct 15, 2012
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of the drug war would be good for america, without fail, the response is oh, yeah, the tragedies in mexico, when is it going to end? it's not that dangerous compared to the pill and the meth. left wing, the right wing, evangelists for crying out loud. the truth is black and white. it's dangerous for me to sound like a cheerleader about any particular issue because people think i'm, you know, cheech or woody harrellson, but the real estate is from a journalist tick perspective, it's black and white, the billions that can be put back in the economy while hurting the cartels. i know they would know that the statistic that's cited, profits could be high, but the fact is quite a lot of organized crimes financing is not from the heroin and meth, but cannabis. we can have american farmers growing this, taxing it, and put narks back to work. their agricultural commissioner is begging to put it back to work for america's factories, clothing, and energy. i went to a stainability festival a few years ago, and the other speaker was usda expert on by -- biofuels. there's one that filters toxics out of
of the drug war would be good for america, without fail, the response is oh, yeah, the tragedies in mexico, when is it going to end? it's not that dangerous compared to the pill and the meth. left wing, the right wing, evangelists for crying out loud. the truth is black and white. it's dangerous for me to sound like a cheerleader about any particular issue because people think i'm, you know, cheech or woody harrellson, but the real estate is from a journalist tick perspective, it's black and...
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Oct 24, 2012
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i want to thank this great governor of new mexico. susana martinez, thank you so much. [cheers] [applause] lets also. for rodney atkins and kid rock. you guys, you are awesome. thank you so much. [cheers] [applause] we got some great calla colorado leaders here. thank you guys for all your leadership. thank you for putting your necks on the line for us. we love colorado. we have been coming out here since i was little guy. my wife, every year, we went to this little place that was a ranch in pike national forest. we have been coming out fishing and skiing and mountain biking and climbing -- indisputable state. this state is going to deliver mitt romney as the next president of the united states. [cheers] [applause] and do you know what we saw last night? we saw a man that is ready to be a great president. what we witnessed was a man with a vision, a man with old ideas and solutions. we also witnessed a president who is out of ideas. we represent a president that has no record to run on. we cannot afford four more years like these last four years. we need mitt romney put
i want to thank this great governor of new mexico. susana martinez, thank you so much. [cheers] [applause] lets also. for rodney atkins and kid rock. you guys, you are awesome. thank you so much. [cheers] [applause] we got some great calla colorado leaders here. thank you guys for all your leadership. thank you for putting your necks on the line for us. we love colorado. we have been coming out here since i was little guy. my wife, every year, we went to this little place that was a ranch in...
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Oct 1, 2012
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problem is 20 million americans don't have a photo id and that is 25 million more than delaware, new mexico and about ten orie 11 other states combined so there are people who don't have an id. that's the problem on the other side of the equation there isn't that much out there and i mean at the polls that we do see as absentee fraud as opposed to at the poll fraud so in ohio for example they did a study and they found that for every 2 million votes cast there was one that was improper so one vote out of 2 million so my biggest concern is we are throwing the baby out because the baby has a drop of bath water and we need to figure out how to focus on a drop of bathwater as opposed to bring the baby out. estimate what about the location of the polling places? >> it's important in the variety of factors one is the location but also things like a machine can't have money are in the polling place, and it's important because we want everybody to do but to cast the vote and if it is more difficult for certain people, certain populations and precincts that is great shape the outcomes and i will giv
problem is 20 million americans don't have a photo id and that is 25 million more than delaware, new mexico and about ten orie 11 other states combined so there are people who don't have an id. that's the problem on the other side of the equation there isn't that much out there and i mean at the polls that we do see as absentee fraud as opposed to at the poll fraud so in ohio for example they did a study and they found that for every 2 million votes cast there was one that was improper so one...
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Oct 14, 2012
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>> guest: it was because i real ly did believe him. >> host: you did not want to go back to mexico. >> guest: yeah, and i wanted to make him proud, and i felt that because i begged him to bring me, i felt i owed him that. i felt that i never wanted my father to say, i shouldn't have brought you. >> winner of the american book award and international latino book award, on growing an illegal alien in los angeles, sunday night. part of book tv this weekend on c-span2. >> here's a look at books being published. mark bowden, author of black hawk down, chronicles the hunt for osama bin laden called, the finish. the killing of osama bin laden. journalist michael dons recounts the last six months of world war ii and the beginning of the cold war, six months in 1945, from world war to cold war. >> and william skinner one of the founders of the american silk industry. a man who turned disaster into destiny. >> in master of the mountain, thomas jefferson and his slaves, historian winecheck friends the findings of recent archaeological work at jefferson's estate, monticello, and a science writer
>> guest: it was because i real ly did believe him. >> host: you did not want to go back to mexico. >> guest: yeah, and i wanted to make him proud, and i felt that because i begged him to bring me, i felt i owed him that. i felt that i never wanted my father to say, i shouldn't have brought you. >> winner of the american book award and international latino book award, on growing an illegal alien in los angeles, sunday night. part of book tv this weekend on c-span2....
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Oct 14, 2012
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i didn't want to go back to mexico and i wanted to make him proud. and then another thing i felt it was that because i baked him to bring me, i felt that i owed him that. i never wanted my father just say i shouldn't have right -- brought you. >> melanie kirkpatrick and joseph kim, one of the people profiled in her boat, "escape from north korea" to discuss the experiences of north koreans who fled the country. this book is about an hour and 15 minutes. >> did after nine welcome to the hudson institution new york book forum to celebrate the publication of "escape from north korea: the untold story of asia's underground railroad." by senior fellow, melanie kirkpatrick. i am ken weinstein, president and ceo of hudson institute and i also like to welcome our audience watching at home on booktv and i also want to especially thank our friends at c-span for covering today's event. there are a couple of guests present today whom i would like to acknowledge. the council general of south korea in new york, ambassador song at who is here. [applause] and i'd al
i didn't want to go back to mexico and i wanted to make him proud. and then another thing i felt it was that because i baked him to bring me, i felt that i owed him that. i never wanted my father just say i shouldn't have right -- brought you. >> melanie kirkpatrick and joseph kim, one of the people profiled in her boat, "escape from north korea" to discuss the experiences of north koreans who fled the country. this book is about an hour and 15 minutes. >> did after nine...
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Oct 7, 2012
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it's not like you where you say well, we have a border with canada, mexico, if you have a border of any state or enemy entity, look what's happening today in the south of israel. prime minister sharon decided to pull out from gaza. i was against it. in my book i write my personal expenses because i was very close to prime minister sharon. and when he decided to disengage from gaza, he was the godfather of my first son and i told him, you know how much i love you, and i want to support you and have you become the prime minister, but the minute we decided to go out and take jews out of the communities, i cannot walk with you anymore politically. and she took that decision. and what we expected, we expected if you take out the jews from gaza, or in your language, you evacuate the settlements, i hear a lot about the settlement. so we tried. we evacuated all the settlements in gaza. we took out all the jews, all the families who lived there. we even took the people who are buried in the cemeteries, took them out. we destroyed of the synagogues. we moved all of them out of gaza. and what did
it's not like you where you say well, we have a border with canada, mexico, if you have a border of any state or enemy entity, look what's happening today in the south of israel. prime minister sharon decided to pull out from gaza. i was against it. in my book i write my personal expenses because i was very close to prime minister sharon. and when he decided to disengage from gaza, he was the godfather of my first son and i told him, you know how much i love you, and i want to support you and...
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Oct 28, 2012
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mercy it was already settled by compromise than late 1840's the future of slavery the territory from mexico and mexican war settled by the compromise of 1850. precedent and tradition in place for another settlement the chief issue between the republicans and the south but not slavery of the 15 states. almost all americans americans, republicans included the constitution and protected slavery. rather the critical question was slavery in the national territories and those that had not yet become states. geographically that we think of as the great plains and the rocky mountains to california. that did not include california. it was already a state to. the question was critical because it had to do with the future of slavery and seven powerpc in the nation. -- southern power in the nation. what is there constitutional rights as citizens? moving slave property into territories owned by the entire nation. the dread scott decision the united states supreme court confirmed the southern constitutional view. republicans will allow no more slaves on any territory. abraham lincoln elected november muc
mercy it was already settled by compromise than late 1840's the future of slavery the territory from mexico and mexican war settled by the compromise of 1850. precedent and tradition in place for another settlement the chief issue between the republicans and the south but not slavery of the 15 states. almost all americans americans, republicans included the constitution and protected slavery. rather the critical question was slavery in the national territories and those that had not yet become...
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Oct 21, 2012
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>> i'm basically a con team playtive and i meditate and had designed my little meditation space in mexico with a cushy looking out in to screenty and peace. but i discovered the world kept calling and i kept responding and i was trying to figure how i could bring them together. the call of the world and needing to sit on my cushy. i had this dream in which when i was my grandfather and i used to watch the cars go by in the little country road and he would choose the red, and i would choose the blew. it was one of the long straight georgia highways, you know. in my dream there in the middle of the highway was my cushy, my rose colored meditation cushy. i think my dream world was trying to telling me i can travel the world, but my cushy, you know, will have to be a traveling cushy. >> and the will be out next spring. >> yes. we've been talking here with alice walker at george mason university where the entire campus is reading in fact "the the campus provided students with the "the color purple." you would like to see more allies walker. booktv spent three hours with her. you can go to book
>> i'm basically a con team playtive and i meditate and had designed my little meditation space in mexico with a cushy looking out in to screenty and peace. but i discovered the world kept calling and i kept responding and i was trying to figure how i could bring them together. the call of the world and needing to sit on my cushy. i had this dream in which when i was my grandfather and i used to watch the cars go by in the little country road and he would choose the red, and i would...
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Oct 19, 2012
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resources in the gulf of mexico and we will send it to congress reaction. it lays out how the united states and mexico will manage the resources that transcend the maritime boundaries. with energy diplomacy we're focused on the second area of the engagement from helping to promote and new energy solutions including energy efficiency to meet demand and diversified and address climate change. the transformation is central to control carbon emissions. it is strong 21st century economy. we know energy transformation cannot be accomplished from government alone. fable made $15 trillion of investment to transmit electricity. governments will provide some of it it comes from the private sector which is a huge opportunity as well as a challenge. i want to make sure american workers and companies are competing for those projects. there leaders across the field of energy renewable, high tech, energy of restructure, and in the coming decades american companies should do more business worldwide to create american jobs. governments can do several things like educate our
resources in the gulf of mexico and we will send it to congress reaction. it lays out how the united states and mexico will manage the resources that transcend the maritime boundaries. with energy diplomacy we're focused on the second area of the engagement from helping to promote and new energy solutions including energy efficiency to meet demand and diversified and address climate change. the transformation is central to control carbon emissions. it is strong 21st century economy. we know...
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Oct 29, 2012
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she was born in mexico but it's too bad he wasn't really a mexican. what was he trying to say by that? >> i think that he actually came out and said it a little bit later in the remarks i forget the words but that would be helping politically. my god it is easier to be a latino in this country than mitt romney. >> that's great. [laughter] >> he had the audacity to say that he would be doing better politically if he were latino. you did for awhile remind people that he had a sort of mexican heritage as they were trying to get the vote we've been hearing a lot about the romney election going on and i want to know your perspective on what really empowers the president, and that is the house and the scent to the consent. i have no comprehension on where the house is going. >> i think that -- people are being optimistic and saying it's possible that the democrats could take the house. i don't really expect that. when you see those it is usually kind of a generic ballot do you like the democrat better but when it gets down to your. i think they are going to
she was born in mexico but it's too bad he wasn't really a mexican. what was he trying to say by that? >> i think that he actually came out and said it a little bit later in the remarks i forget the words but that would be helping politically. my god it is easier to be a latino in this country than mitt romney. >> that's great. [laughter] >> he had the audacity to say that he would be doing better politically if he were latino. you did for awhile remind people that he had a...
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Oct 27, 2012
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grant, at the mexico drug cartel and margaret draper inside the house of representatives. the texas book festival live this weekend on booktv on c-span2. now on booktv actor tony danza recounts the year he spent teaching tenth grade english in philadelphia's largest bicycle. the author before becoming an actor wanted to be a teacher, recalls the initial troubles he had engaging his students and his later breakthroughs. this is 45 minutes. [applause] >> hello, everyone. white neck. what are we going to do? i can't believe when i am standing backstage listening to carol say those things about me, i want you to know, by the way, the cameras in january, i want you to see, i thought i had figured out a way to make teaching a. make it a tv job. i could be a teacher and her tv job. they left in january and by was a real teacher. i went listening to ms. carroll say those things to me. the greatest compliment at the end of the year, i had gone through this journey with her and i am reading yours, she asked me what i consider coming back, i thought was the greatest compliment, but i
grant, at the mexico drug cartel and margaret draper inside the house of representatives. the texas book festival live this weekend on booktv on c-span2. now on booktv actor tony danza recounts the year he spent teaching tenth grade english in philadelphia's largest bicycle. the author before becoming an actor wanted to be a teacher, recalls the initial troubles he had engaging his students and his later breakthroughs. this is 45 minutes. [applause] >> hello, everyone. white neck. what...
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Oct 7, 2012
10/12
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attorney by the name of david ecclesia said new mexico lasses job. in 2004, he was passed by rove with prosecuting what rove cause voter fraud. and to find people fraudulently registered to vote. he investigated for several instead it's not happening. it doesn't exist. as a result of that, he lost his job. the brennan center at nyu school of law has been thorough investigation at the idea of voter fraud. they say basically it doesn't exist. there've been 10 or 12 cases in the first 10 years of this century out of hundreds of millions of those spirits someone may register as mickey mouse, but mickey mouse never shows up in rows. but nevertheless, rove has initiated a cam pain and its allies in more than 30 states legislature of having votes requiring voter ids. now part of the democrats are saying this is a severe form of voter suppression. that is in many cases you find the elderly was given up their drivers licenses, but it's perfect years, the out they no longer have a government issued i.d., so they are not allowed to vote. you have minorities tha
attorney by the name of david ecclesia said new mexico lasses job. in 2004, he was passed by rove with prosecuting what rove cause voter fraud. and to find people fraudulently registered to vote. he investigated for several instead it's not happening. it doesn't exist. as a result of that, he lost his job. the brennan center at nyu school of law has been thorough investigation at the idea of voter fraud. they say basically it doesn't exist. there've been 10 or 12 cases in the first 10 years of...
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Oct 10, 2012
10/12
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but 25% of mexico is considerable to give us access to capital we see adverse circumstances we weren't able to boost the core capital. to have. >> i have a general comment. when you have the restrictive of the policies borrowed -- the monetary policies in the u.s. and the u.k., i would welcome a flexible policy to be coupled with their policy. i think they're doing a great job to inject 1 trillion euros into the system and then the issue through the framework announced but the european central bank would be willing in the secondary market provided a sufficient way to do it that this operation could be done itself but on behalf of europe and france you have the double capacity. it is understandable because once you set to emplace of place you have to be sure of the issues. it is one of the closest of europe. and the union has to except this and the system of conditionality. to the extent it provides a boost so with us standard of today's basis points it has an impact been my view give then the macro economic fundamentals on the basis points so in order to go in that direction of the sov
but 25% of mexico is considerable to give us access to capital we see adverse circumstances we weren't able to boost the core capital. to have. >> i have a general comment. when you have the restrictive of the policies borrowed -- the monetary policies in the u.s. and the u.k., i would welcome a flexible policy to be coupled with their policy. i think they're doing a great job to inject 1 trillion euros into the system and then the issue through the framework announced but the european...
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Oct 26, 2012
10/12
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of dollars in taxpayer funds and move the jobs over to mexico. i talked to somebody like david lost his job and he moved away from the community in order to find works. those are the kind of people talk about how hurtful they've been in the state of illinois. >> moderator: herb >> moderator: directed at cheri bustos. some of the corporation for public broadcasting which helps me and the other stations carrying this debate. the appropriations about four injured $40 million per year or in other words 1121% of the federal budget. do you favor eliminating this appropriation and if so how would you? bustos: i do not favor of eliminating them. in fact i'm a supporter for public television and a supporter of public radio. i'm pleased to say i used to be on the board of directors of the rock island base review station where you happen to be employed. if you can even look at that example is the only radio station in that region that covers news. we're fortunate to have alex over here working but that would go away under a proposal like this. my kids, my h
of dollars in taxpayer funds and move the jobs over to mexico. i talked to somebody like david lost his job and he moved away from the community in order to find works. those are the kind of people talk about how hurtful they've been in the state of illinois. >> moderator: herb >> moderator: directed at cheri bustos. some of the corporation for public broadcasting which helps me and the other stations carrying this debate. the appropriations about four injured $40 million per year...
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Oct 27, 2012
10/12
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the first one in 1994, as you mentioned, mexico. and that was a solvently crisis. we feared that a country would go bust, ie, the credit was no good. that would ripple with dangerous effect for the banking system. that got handled, we aside from now how and puttered along to 1998 when russia and indonesia posed solvent sei risk in the financial system. we managed that and puttered along. this time no so the so long. we hit 1999, and hedge fund called long-term capital management blew posing what anna described, complexity risk. raising the perspective of a shadow institution unregulated by the banking agency would have caused so much damage to the banking sector that the federal reserve very inappropriately rushed in the package of the assistance from the banking sector to support the hedge fund. we puttered some more. this time two years to 2001. we had one of the most frightening case of sis timmic risk when the world trade tower came down. at that point because where the terrorist struck, they meant to hit the financial system, we came very close to a shut down
the first one in 1994, as you mentioned, mexico. and that was a solvently crisis. we feared that a country would go bust, ie, the credit was no good. that would ripple with dangerous effect for the banking system. that got handled, we aside from now how and puttered along to 1998 when russia and indonesia posed solvent sei risk in the financial system. we managed that and puttered along. this time no so the so long. we hit 1999, and hedge fund called long-term capital management blew posing...
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Oct 25, 2012
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pires: and the only one at this table who's worked in mexico. i've many mexican friends come and many of them across the border illegally, regularly, border security in northern mexico is considered a joke that mexicans. we don't have secure borders hear politicians say we do doesn't make a difference. we are a nation of immigrants. we need immigration that sees the american spirit. there's many bright ways to do it and there's a handful of wrong ways to do it. it's not hard to come here legally. >> moderator: what do you think i'm not? transcriber think it's a false issue. let's be realistic at the borders almost two dozen miles, four states, six mexican state. it's enormous. i've been through all of mexico and texas. texas is the site of the bureau. the idea you blame the democrats and republicans. the sooner the better. in the meantime, let's protect our families. that's first and foremost, particularly those children were born i citizens as everyone in this room. they are citizens. >> moderator: we now move on to next topic. your question to
pires: and the only one at this table who's worked in mexico. i've many mexican friends come and many of them across the border illegally, regularly, border security in northern mexico is considered a joke that mexicans. we don't have secure borders hear politicians say we do doesn't make a difference. we are a nation of immigrants. we need immigration that sees the american spirit. there's many bright ways to do it and there's a handful of wrong ways to do it. it's not hard to come here...
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Oct 8, 2012
10/12
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mexico, was just had an election, being a perfect example. a national id card. the election process is clear, transparent. frankly, no one questioned it after it happened. >> hi. >> asking why so many americans don't vote. what you think that is? >> well, i would turn around the question. if you had a choice between everyone voting, even if they knew nothing about the issues of the candid it's and cared nothing but the issues of the candidates and people voting 60, 70 percent of them, which is traditionally our number, but they did know something about the election are the candid it's , which would prefer? >> the latter. >> i hope so. you know, there are some people who sincerely believe this track and out of a democracy is that as many people as possible votes even in some cases if they know nothing or even if it doesn't mean anything. i disagree. i believe we have an informed electorate and to strive for an even more informed electorate. the bottom line is, we are not a country that finds people if they don't vote like belgium or austria. i think that is ridic
mexico, was just had an election, being a perfect example. a national id card. the election process is clear, transparent. frankly, no one questioned it after it happened. >> hi. >> asking why so many americans don't vote. what you think that is? >> well, i would turn around the question. if you had a choice between everyone voting, even if they knew nothing about the issues of the candid it's and cared nothing but the issues of the candidates and people voting 60, 70 percent...
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Oct 26, 2012
10/12
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the first one in 1994 mexico. there was a solvency crisis because we feared that the country would go bust and the would ripple with dangerous affect the banking system. that got handled and we put it along to 1998 when russia and indonesia's post solvency risks in the financial system and we puttered along this time not so long because we get 1999 and a hedge fund called long term capital management in blue posing what was described as capital risk raising the prospect of a shettle institution and regulated by the banking industry's would have caused so much damage that the
the first one in 1994 mexico. there was a solvency crisis because we feared that the country would go bust and the would ripple with dangerous affect the banking system. that got handled and we put it along to 1998 when russia and indonesia's post solvency risks in the financial system and we puttered along this time not so long because we get 1999 and a hedge fund called long term capital management in blue posing what was described as capital risk raising the prospect of a shettle institution...